In a famous but misunderstood quotation, Marx wrote:
"Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless
world, just as it is the spirit of a spiritless situation." It is, he
concluded, "the opium of the people." Opiates hide the pain of
physical disease without curing it. Religion, which promises divine forgiveness
and a better life in the next world, conceals the pain inflicted by poverty,
hunger, and the other social diseases of this world. It consoles the exploited
and oppressed and justifies exploitation and oppression here-and-now with the
promise of retribution and justice for exploiters and oppressors hereafter. It
justifies suffering on the basis of sin. The material roots of suffering are
hidden behind a spiritual facade. Suffering is presented not as an alterable
product of this world, but as unalterable punishment by God or karma for our
moral transgressions.
Present-day society is wholly based on the exploitation of
the vast masses of the working class by a tiny minority of the population, the
class of the landowners and that of the capitalists. It is a slave society,
since the "free" workers, who all their life work for the
capitalists, are "entitled" only to such means of subsistence as are
essential for the maintenance of slaves who produce profit, for the
safeguarding and perpetuation of capitalist slavery. Rather than freeing us
from want and widening and deepening democracy, as these advances can, it has
instead brought us to the brink of environmental catastrophe, overseen the
concentration of wealth into fewer and fewer hands through the immiseration of
billions.
Religion is one of the forms of oppression. Burdened by
their perpetual toil for others, by want, the alienation, and their impotence
in their struggle against the exploiters inevitably gives rise to the belief in
a better life. All their lives they are taught by religion to be submissive and
patient while here on earth. The main cause of religion is the socially
downtrodden condition of the working masses and their apparently complete
helplessness in the face of the blind forces of capitalism. To eliminate
religion therefore ultimately requires pulling up this deep social root. Charity
serves to ease suffering while leaving unaddressed the roots of suffering. It
renders the condition of the exploited and oppressed slightly less intolerable,
and eases the conscience of the ruling class. It gives the poor a few scraps
from the tables of the rich to keep the poor from demanding a seat at the
table. A few scraps do not make for socialism.
Both science and religion are attempts to explain the
universe. Materialism holds that everything that exists comes from matter and
its movements. For example, a material substance, the brain, is required to
generate ideas — including ideas about supernatural beings! The physical world
precedes the world of ideas, and the world still exists even if we stop
thinking about it. Religious doctrines are idealist. They attribute the
existence and workings of the stars, the earth, and living organisms to the
intervention of a deity or spirit. Science, on the other hand, is materialist.
It posits that these things exist and operate as they do not because of
supernatural forces, but because of laws of nature that can be studied and
understood.
Religion is of little use in explaining why society operates
the way that it does, beyond "that's what God wants." In fact, since
the rise of class society, the major religions of the world provide
justification for what the ruling class wants: support for its privilege to
exploit. While it finds religion useful, capitalism also undermines religion.
Globalisation, modernisation, and urbanisation have brought previously isolated
communities the world over into contact with one another. There has been an
unprecedented intermingling of peoples, cultures, and religions. It is much
easier for religion to keep a stranglehold on the minds of isolated, ignorant
peasants (or suburbanites) living in largely homogenous communities than it is
to do the same to the minds of the modern urban proletariat living in contact
with a variety of ideas and people.
In the sense of seeking a return to some previous pious age
religion thus serves to undermine the struggle for socialism—the struggle for
emancipation—because it misidentifies the causes of our present problems. It
sees sin as the cause of our suffering. Just as militant atheism will not deal
religion its deathblows, neither will capitalism, for neither can abolish the
conditions that give rise to religion. So long as capitalism persists, so too
will religion. Religion persists in spite of the theoretical assaults against
it because it continues to play a practical social function. Churches, mosques,
synagogues, temples of all sorts, religious schools, “faith-based” charities:
these institutions are the substance of religion. Nor will we abolish religion
by prohibition, as the anti-religious campaigns of the past have taught us, as
soon as the direct assault against religion subsides, religion creeps back into
society. It is only by rendering the social function of religious institutions
obsolete and unnecessary that we will abolish religion. How? By abolishing the
conditions of poverty and ignorance to which religion is a response, to which
it is a false panacea which only perpetuates the diseases for which it claims
to be a cure. In other words, by abolishing capitalism. We must fight with
workers to ameliorate their material condition so that they will have no need
of spiritual solace, so that we may govern ourselves and never again bend the
knee before bosses, kings, gods, priests, or presidents.
Religion is not a private affair. The Socialist Party is an
association of class-conscious men and women for the emancipation of the
working class. Such an association cannot and must not be indifferent to lack
of knowledge, ignorance or mysticism in the shape of religious beliefs. We are
driving out mysticism through the use of materialism. Socialism is not a
defense of the status quo but a critique of it, and a scientific one. Just as
natural scientists seek to understand the laws that turn one form of matter or
energy into another, so too do socialists seek to understand the laws that turn
one form of society into another. Socialism is materialist because it proceeds
from the basic observation that human social organisation is concerned first
and foremost with satisfying the survival needs of its members. In the process,
humans act on nature with continually expanding technical skills and knowledge.
Over time, these advances in technology, broadly defined, force epic changes in
social structure.
The division of society into classes was one such
transformation, leading to an entrenched conflict of material interests between
different groups. Socialists believe that just as the force holding down a
volcano eventually succumbs to the greater force beneath it, these conflicting
class interests engender struggles for power that lead periodically to social
eruptions — to revolution. The Socialist Party understands that the answer is
not to try to stamp out religion, but to make the revolutionary changes in
society that will liberate and uplift humanity in the here and now. The
Socialist Party strives to achieve a world where peace and freedom are not the
rewards of life in heaven, but the reality of life on earth.
There is a type of “socialist” who seek a reconciliation
with religion by declaring it to be a “private matter” and then there is
another “socialist” who declares “If Mohammed will not come to the mountain,
the mountain must come to Mohammed”; if the religious will not come to
socialism, socialists must come to religion. Socialists who call for a
rapprochement with religion are behind the times—they have overestimated the
strength of religion. Religion is dying and has been for some time. Most
people, including most of the proletariat in the advanced industrial countries,
are de facto, if not outright, atheists. What matters isn’t what people say,
but what they do, and what they don’t do. Increasingly they don’t identify with
religion, they don’t know religious dogma, they don’t abide by religious
commandments, they don’t attend church, they don’t listen to priests.
These two types of “socialists” have misjudged the nature of
religion. While it provides consolation to the exploited and oppressed, it also
justifies exploitation and oppression. It is a product of suffering, one which
reinforces and reproduces suffering. For every fine-sounding phrase in
scripture or out of the mouth of a priest, there are countless more vile words.
Religiously inspired deeds of cruelty far outnumber acts of charity. Religion
aids in the ruling class strategy of divide and rule. Behind its fine-sounding sermons
of “universal brotherhood” and “love,” religion sows division and discord. It
divides the world into saints and sinners, saved and damned, orthodox and
heretic, adherents and infidels. Through such division it hinders the
development of class consciousness. There cannot be a reconciliation of
socialism and religion; to call for such a reconciliation is to call for a
reconciliation of emancipation and slavery.
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